lbfj Health Care Lobbyis... 投稿者:MethrenSor 投稿日:2024/12/12(Thu) 12:20 No.19778435
Uzug Many College Students Poor On 3 Rs WASHINGTON - An 1862 letter to President Abraham Lincoln from three military surgeons requesting a chaplain to tend to the wounded and dying soldiers after the Battle of Antietam, accompanied by the president s signed response, were returned to the National Archives on Thursday.Bill Panagopulos, president of Alexander Historical Auctions, in Stamford, Connec <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.co.uk>stanley uk</a> ticut, helped negotiate the return and handed the documents over to David Ferriero, archivist of the United States, at a ceremony at the National Archives. I m not just returning it to the Archives, I m returning it to the United States, Panagopulos said. This building is where it <a href=https://www.stanleycup.lt>stanley cups</a> belongs. It s coming home. Investigators watch carefully for records that should be held at the Archives, Ferriero said. But we also benefit from dealers who recognize what they have, he added.Officials believe the documents came from the file of Rev. Henry Edwards, who served as chaplain at a military hospital in Hagerstown, Maryland. Citations in red on the letters list a file number that matches the file held at the National Archives building in Washington. But authorities say it s not clear exactly how or when the documents were removed and the circumstances involved. The surgeons Nov. 6, 1862, letter asks Lincoln to appoint a chaplain for hospitals treating the wounded from the battle and the cov <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.pl>stanley polska</a> er sheet of Edwards military file includes Lincoln s Nov. 12, 1862, signed endorsement of the appointment.Investigative archivist Mitch Lzzl A Nuclear Bunker With Its Own Hospital and BBC Studio Can Be Yours If you use TweetDeck in any capacity, you ;re probably aware of a nasty little bug that was running <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.es>stanley spain</a> rampant around TweetDeck hallowed columns yesterday afternoon. But what, exactly, was causing all the retweeted trouble Comp <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.ca>stanley tumbler</a> uterphile Tom Scott breaks it down. It all has to do with cross-site scripting, a vulnerability that allows hackers to inject client-side script into web pages viewed by other users. Normally, sites employ a filter to stop any user-written script from affecting a web page, but there was one little bitty part of that now notorious tweet that was able to plow through TweetDeck defenses: the emoji heart. TweetDeck just started supportin <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.es>stanley spain</a> g emoji a few days ago, and apparently, it still hadn ;t quite worked out all the kinks. If the heart hadn ;t been there, TweetDeck would have processed the tweet safely and none of this would have ever happened. Let just be grateful that andy didn ;t take the opportunity to do some real damage. TweetDeckTWITTERVulnerability
|